1. Monitoring Objectives
After inoculation (fungal, chemical, mechanical, or dual-action), monitoring is essential to:
- Assess resin formation around inoculation sites
- Detect tree stress or infection beyond intended inoculation
- Plan harvesting or re-treatment if necessary
- Ensure overall tree health for future resin cycles
2. Monitoring Timeline & Parameters
A. 3–6 Months Post-Inoculation
Purpose: Early response detection
Observations:
- Wound healing / callus formation
- Discoloration around inoculation site (wood darkening)
- Moisture retention at the wound
- Signs of contamination: unwanted fungi, mold, or decay
Actions:
- Remove or re-seal any exposed inoculant if contamination occurs
- Adjust soil moisture and nutrition to reduce stress
B. 6–12 Months Post-Inoculation
Purpose: Resin initiation monitoring
Observations:
- Dark streaks or patches in xylem around inoculation site
- Fragrance detection: light aromatic smell indicates early resin formation
- Tree vigor: check leaf color, new shoots, and growth rate
Actions:
- Continue regular irrigation and organic fertilization
- Document size and spread of resinous wood
- Optionally, non-destructive sampling (small wood chips) for quality check
C. 12–18 Months Post-Inoculation
Purpose: Active resin accumulation
Observations:
- Resin-rich wood darkening more pronounced
- Fragrance intensity increases
- Distribution: check if resin is forming uniformly around inoculation sites
- Tree health: check for signs of over-stressing or dieback
Actions:
- Continue tree care (fertilization, irrigation, pest control)
- Consider additional induction in underperforming areas (if dual-action inoculant allows)
D. 18–24 Months Post-Inoculation
Purpose: Resin maturity & harvest readiness
Observations:
- Well-formed resin blocks visible around wound
- Fragrance profile approaching market quality
- Signs of decay or over-infection (may require early harvest or tree pruning)
Actions:
- Evaluate harvestable resin quantity and quality
- Plan sustainable re-inoculation cycles
- Record data for ROI and yield modeling
3. Monitoring Techniques
| Technique | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Visual inspection | Wound condition, discoloration, resin accumulation |
| Palpation / scraping | Detect hardened resin, early aromatic detection |
| Small core sampling | Non-destructive analysis of resin content |
| Photography / mapping | Track progression over time |
| Fragrance assessment | Evaluate resin maturity and quality |
| Tree health check | Leaf color, canopy density, pest/disease presence |
4. Record-Keeping
- Maintain a tree-by-tree monitoring log:
- Date of inoculation
- Type of inoculant used
- Wound location & depth
- Observations at each monitoring interval
- Resin formation progress (color, spread, fragrance)
- Tree health indicators
- Use this data to:
- Determine best harvest timing
- Optimize future inoculation protocols
- Model yield and ROI
5. Best Practices
- Monitor every 3 months during the first year, then every 6 months thereafter.
- Avoid excessive handling that could damage resin or introduce contamination.
- Combine visual, olfactory, and small sample assessments for accurate resin evaluation.
- Ensure tree recovery with irrigation, organic fertilizers, and pest control throughout the monitoring period.
- Document all findings for training, research, or plantation management.
